Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Hurst

1928 OK 19, 263 P. 113, 129 Okla. 1, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 331
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 10, 1928
Docket17490
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1928 OK 19 (Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Hurst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Hurst, 1928 OK 19, 263 P. 113, 129 Okla. 1, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 331 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

On May 12, 1923, Edward Hurst, aged 22, an apprenticed helper in the shops of the Rock Island Railroad at Shawnee, Okla., was injured while operating a “wobble” saw. His injuries consisted of the loss of two fingers and injury to his other two fingers of his right hand. A “wobble” saw is constructed much like a ripsaw, being equipped with a circular saw 12 or 15 inches in diameter. The purpose of the machine is to cut a uniform groove in timbers fed into the saw. The frame work enclosing the saw is much like a square reading table with a fiat top, the upper edge of the saw protrudes through a slot in the top of the table for a distance sufficient to cut the groove the depth desired. The saw is caused to wobble in its revolutions by puttingi on the shaft on either side of the saw round wedge-shaped washers. These cause the saw to set at an angle, and when the same revolves the wedge-shaped washers cause the revolving saw to wobble from side to side. The width of the groove cut is regulated by the acuteness of the angle or taper of the wedge-shaped washers, and the depth of the groove cut is regulated by lowering or raising the top of the table, so as to expose more or less of the revolving saw above the plane of the table, the top of which is provided with hinges, and may be raised or lowered like the lid of' a box. The top is made to stay at the desired height by placing thereunder wooden wedges of the size and dimensions necessary. The top of this table, aside from the slot through which a portion of the saw protrudes, is entirely plain with the exception of a piece of timber parallel with and about IV? inches from *2 the slot. This operates as a guide, and the block sought to be grooved is pressed forward, downward and against this guard while the saw is making the grooves.

At the time of plaintiffs injuries he was cutting grooves in pieces of wood eight inches long, 3% inches wide, at. one end and about one inch wide at the other end, and about 1-J- inches in thickness. These blocks contained three holes in a straight line about inches in diameter sunk to a depth of three-fourths of an inch in the block, these holes being 1% inches apart and lying entirely within the plane intended to be grooved.

Plaintiff in a suit for damages against said railroad and his foreman, R. T. Mason, alleged in his petition several acts of negligence, ¡but the only one held pertinent here as supported by evidence was that plaintiff was inexperienced and unacquainted with this kind of work, to the knowledge of the defendants; that the work was dangerous and hazardous and that the handling with the naked hand of such short blocks of wood requiring the pressure to be such as to keep the wood against the guard rail, and also to press the blocks forward at the same time, so .that the saw would take hold and do its work, was inherently dangerous and known by the defendants to be dangerous, and that in placing the plaintiff, who was unused and unacquainted with this work and had no experience with the operation of such a saw, upon such timbers without instructing him and warning him of the danger, was negligence.

The answer of each defendant set up: (lj A general denial; (2) contributory negligence; and (3) assumption of risk. At the conclusion of plaintiffs evidence the court held that there was no evidence of defects in the machinery and that the issue would be submitted to the jury solely upon the issue as to whether or not the defendant was negligent in placing the plaintiff at work operating a dangerous machine while inexperienced, without warning and instructions with reference to the dangers of the work.

Plaintiff testified that the defendants gave him no instructions whatever, said nothing about the dangers of operating a wobble saw. said nothing about it in the presence of the witness, and that no one gave him any instructions, and, further, that Mr. Mason, one of the defendants, a foreman for the Rock Island Railroad, who had oversight and direction over the plaintiff, instructed him to do the work; that Mr. Mason was the foreman over the mill; that he did not say anything to the witness about how to do the work, but that he ran several of the blocks over the saw himself, and said that it was all right, for the witness to go ahead and run the blocks over the saw, and that Mr Mason adjusted the saw prior to running the blocks over the same; that Mr. Mason also put the wedges under the table and ran five of the blocks through the saw.

„ It is true that the plaintiff said that he had done pieces of timber four feet in length over the saw before this time, and had seen others do the same, but he says that he had never operated the saw on a piece of material as small as those he was using at the time of the injury.

“Q. I will ask you, Mr. Hurst, if you knew at the time you were injured and were using a piece of material of the size and length you have testified to here, you knew that it was dangerous to you to do that? A. No, I did not.”

E F. Sturdevant, witness for plaintiff, testified, in substance, that he was a carpenter and contractor living in El Reno; has been in the business 18 years; became familiar with the wobble saw; had had two years’ experience in the running of a wobble saw, and also became familiar with the danger of operating same; says that it is more dangerous to feed into a saw a short piece of timber than a long piece, and that in a long piece a man has a better chance to hold the timber over the saw, and that there is less danger of its kicking his hand over the saw all the time, and that the hand would not have to ' e over the saw like it would be if the piece of umber were short. The block should be held in the hand and pressed against the guide and also against the saw. There is considerable pressure from underneath.

Mr. Townsend, who had general control of the employees in the roundhouse, testified that it was Mr. Mason’s duty to properly instruct the plaintiff. The following questions were asked and the answers given;

“Q. Before a boy is put to work on a job like that, if he has never done it before. he would have thorough Instructions before he is put to work on a wobble saw? A. Yes. sir. Q. And if he hasn’t had thorough instructions, you shouldn’t put him on it? A. Why, certainly not. * * * Q. Mr. Townsend, you wouldn’t put a boy that is inexperienced on a job on a wobble saw without giving him thorough instructions, would' you? A. No, sir.”

*3 Mr. Mason, who was the immediate superior over the plaintiff, and who is also one of the defendants, testified that he had instructed the plaintiff in the use of this saw, and that it was his duty always to instruct the apprentices. He explains that he put pine blocks under the top of the table to make it rigid and prevent vibration. He says he has known the blocks to slip out or work out, and that when they did work out, the table would gradually settle, which would cause the saw to protrude further through the opening. He says that he was the one who took plaintiff off the job he was formerly working at and put him at the wobble saw, and showed the plaintiff how to hold the blocks and told him to hold the blocks just like the witness was holding them.

“Q. Why did you* tell him that? A. Because it was the proper way to do. It was the only safe way. Q. Didn’t he know about it as well as you? A.

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 19, 263 P. 113, 129 Okla. 1, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-r-i-p-ry-co-v-hurst-okla-1928.